1 / 16

Economic Drivers

CCS REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS. EMMISSIONS / CAP AND TRADE REGULATIONS. Economic Drivers. OWNERSHIP AND RESERVOIR PROTECTION. UIC AND HEALTH & SAFETY. CO2 CAPTURE, TRANSPORTATION AND GEOLOGIC STORAGE PROCESS.

romaine
Télécharger la présentation

Economic Drivers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CCS REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS EMMISSIONS / CAP AND TRADE REGULATIONS Economic Drivers OWNERSHIP AND RESERVOIR PROTECTION UIC AND HEALTH & SAFETY

  2. CO2 CAPTURE, TRANSPORTATION AND GEOLOGIC STORAGE PROCESS Existing Regs Administered by State and Federal Environmental Agencies and State PSC Existing Regs Administered by State and Federal Pipeline Agencies (USDOT/ State PSC) New UIC Regs administerd under federal partnership with State Environmental or Oil and Gas Agency Long Term Storage Framework Not Developed – Federal or State (partnership) assumption of “caretaker” role.

  3. HISTORY OF IOGCC CO2 EFFORTS Concept conceived at what has come to be known in IOGCC CO2 “folk lore” as the “Alta Summit” in 2001. IOGCC Geological CO2 Sequestration Task Force created by IOGCC Resolution in December 2002. Task Force extended - with name change to the IOGCC CCGS Regulatory Task Force – in October 2004. Phase I Report – 2005 Phase II Report – 2008 Task Force 4th adopted at 2008 fall meeting in Santa Fe. Funded by USDOE/NETL and worked closely with the seven DOE Regional Carbon Sequestration Partnerships.

  4. What the Guidance Document provides to states & provinces Background on why states and provinces are the most logical “cradle to grave” regulators. Useful background on climate change and the importance of geologic storage. Model statute and regulations Legal analysis of ownership issues

  5. Model Statutes and Regulations

  6. Overview and Storage Rights

  7. EPA Regulatory Overlap EPA authority under SDWA in green box Will ensure national consistency and protection of drinking water for operational phase State and EPA regulatory frameworks systems can work “seamlessly”.

  8. ISSUES EPA PROPOSED UIC RULE WILL NOT ADDRESSDue To Limitations in Federal Safe Drinking Water Act CO2 will not be classified as waste or pollutant Overall site licensing, property right issues, eminent domainnot addressed - (AOR/Permit Area modified to extend over entire area projected to be impacted by total volume of CO2 to be stored) Long term “Caretaker” responsibility (Post Closure Liability) for the time period beyond the established regulatory post closure period - (Rule proposes 50 years). Industry or state role at present time if projects undertaken. Will not determine CO2 storage/EOR will qualify for a CO2 emission credit – future federal/market based system.

  9. States Needed to Complete CGS Regulatory Framework site licensing/ amalgamation of storage rights well Injection and closure operations AREA OF EPA OVERLAP long term “Care Taker” phase

  10. STATE ADMINISTERED “CRADLE TO GRAVE” CGS REGULATORY FRAMEWORK PAYMENT OF STORAGE FEE OPERATIONAL BOND SITE LICENSING AND CERTIFICATION SITE AND WELL OPERATIONS INDIVIDUAL WELL BONDS BONDS RELEASED AS WELLS PLUGGED SITE CLOSURE AND WELL PLUGGING LONG TERM STATE ADMINISTERED TRUST FUND ASSUMES RESPONSIBILITY FOR OVERSIGHT AND LIABILITY STORAGE UIC Overlap BOND RELEASED 10 YEARS AFTER INJECTION CEASES

  11. Types of Risk/Liability/Damage Claims • Local environmental damage • Global environmental damage • Loss of Credit • Property loss/damage • Health and safety liability • Operational disruption • Transfer of ownership • Leakage monitoring and prevention

  12. Cross-Border Agreement Between States

  13. Cross-Border Agreement Between States and Feds

  14. States and Provinces Currently Developing Or Adopted CO2 Legislation and/or Regulations • California Texas • Indiana Alberta • Illinois British Columbia • Kansas Nova Scotia • Louisiana Saskatchewan • Michigan • Montana • New Mexico • New York • North Dakota • Ohio • Oklahoma • Utah • Washington • West Virginia • Wyoming

  15. IOGCC CO2 Next Steps – Public Outreach INSIDE: CARBON CAPTURE, STORAGE and TRANSPORTATION From waste to resource. Practical applications. Defining carbon regulations.

More Related